205 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
205 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
What follows is an introduction to a new character of my creation - Tracy
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Jessup. Tracy is (very) loosely based upon myself, and she has now been
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placed in Central Casting. If you're looking for a character for a story
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you're working on, and she seems to fit the bill, you are welcome to her.
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I have only two requests:
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1) Send me a copy of the story (snail mail - I only have once-a-week
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Net access, and can't always get to everything here) at:
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Kirsten M Berry
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35 Newell Rd #303
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E Palo Alto, CA 94303-2728
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USA
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2) Don't kill her, whatever you do. Grievous injury is okay - just be
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sure to mention she recovers.
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And now, on with the show.
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*****
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All her life, Tracy Jessup had been a believer.
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The things she had believed in throughout her 27 years had been numerous and
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varied. She believed in the power of the human spirit - she didn't
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necessarily *understand* it, but she believed in it. She believed in the
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power inherent in the American justice system, and saw it as a source of
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positive change in the country. And, above all else, she believed beyond a
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shadow of a doubt in the power of the supernatural. She couldn't say why;
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she didn't have first-hand experience; she didn't have anything that could
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be considered "proof." It was just the way she felt.
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The first two beliefs led Tracy to tackle what most people told her was an
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insane double major - Behavioral Psych and Administration of Justice - at a
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university thousands of miles from home (which in itself was a good thing:
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It gave Tracy the opportunity to realize that she didn't have to be "Mama's
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little junebug" anymore), which in turn led to the mythical "opportunity of a
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lifetime" that people in Greenfield, Connecticut, just never got: An
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opportunity to enter the Academy. The last item on that list, as she made
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her way through the final weeks of study, was turning out to be a bigger
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burden than Tracy could ever have imagined.
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It had started out as a fairly straightforward class session, and when the
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instructor opened the floor for questions, Tracy hadn't hesitated to raise
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her hand. _That has got to be the best thing college did for me_, she
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thought. _I don't think I could have survived being that shy much longer_.
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Her question brought up several experimental theories, which the instructor
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patiently explained had relatively little bearing on the situation they had
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been discussing, although she _had_ seen cases which, if not for theory and a
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willingness to consider it, would remain open to this day. The ensuing
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clamor for details, which resulted only in cryptic answers, if any, took up
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the rest of the time period, and with a solemn vow to herself to keep the
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class on-topic next time, the instructor left.
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Tracy was set to follow quickly, but stood transfixed as she heard the
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comments from the back of the room, deliberately pitched just a little louder
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than conversational tones would generally permit. "Well, there she goes,
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ladies and gentleman - Deanna Troi," remarked one wag.
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"How'd she get in the Academy, anyway?" asked another. "You'd think the
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Agency would have enough on its plate with *one* Spooky Mulder."
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"I guess we'll just have to call her 'Spacy'!" the first offender responded,
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to be greeted with peals of laughter from the rest of his entourage.
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_I will *not* rush out of the room_, Tracy chanted silently, a personal mantra
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designed to retain as much of both her dignity and sanity as she could. For
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the first time since freshman year, being "Mama's little junebug" again looked
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very tempting. She made it as far as the door, then prepared to bolt - only
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to run into her instructor. Notebooks poured onto the floor, and Tracy sank
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into a heap alongside them, as much to try and clean up the mess she had made
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as to avoid looking her in the eye.
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"Hey, it's all right - I've got it." Agent Dana Scully dropped to one knee
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next to her student, dividing papers up amongst their original owners.
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Abruptly, she turned and brushed Tracy's hair out of her face. Despite the
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negligible difference in their ages, Scully felt an almost maternal urge to
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take care of her - to let her know it was all going to be okay. "I heard
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everything, you know, and while I deplore their lack of tact in this
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situation, I have to admit I've noticed the resemblance myself - I'd be
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blind not to."
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Tracy looked up at her and smiled ruefully. "You know, if I'd heard it from
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you first, I'd have considered it the highest possible compliment."
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Books in hand, the two stood. "See me in my office tonight at 6:30, Ms.
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Jessup. You might be interested in what you find there." Leaving Tracy to
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ponder one more cryptic statement for the afternoon, Scully departed.
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Fox Mulder was *not* having a good day. Surveillance had never been one of
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his favorite elements of field work, and knowing that he was there as
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"punishment" was just one more twist of the knife. When Scully called,
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reminding him once more of what he wanted to be doing - what he *should* be
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doing - he rather resented it. "The Agency does not allow me time in this
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fabulous schedule for a dinner date, Scully."
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"It's not a date, Mulder - this is business. I'm asking you to come in for
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a consultation with one of my students." The voice coming out of his cellular
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phone was insistent - _just like she always is when she wants me to take her
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side of a case. Damn_! Mulder shook his head, vainly trying to clear the
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cobwebs - and the memories. "Just be at my office at six, okay?"
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"I'll see if I can find one more favor to call in."
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The relief in Scully's voice was almost visible. "Great. Oh, and Mulder?"
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"What?"
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"Try and shake the sunflower seeds out of your hair first."
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Automatically, his hand went up to his head. She was right. "I think one of
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your cadavers is calling you, Scully." Mulder hung up, resisting the urge to
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throw the phone across the room. Looking at his watch, he started making
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calls. If there was one thing he had learned working with Scully, it was
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that she didn't push her ideas unless she was utterly convinced that she was
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right. After all the wild hunches of his that she had followed - however
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begrudgingly - he owed her this one.
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It was difficult to determine which of the two people remaining in the room
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was more uncomfortable - Tracy or Mulder. What was clear was that neither
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one was likely to forgive Scully anytime soon for leaving them to their own
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devices like this.
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Figuring one of them had better say something before they both went crazy,
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Mulder plunged blindly ahead. "I've heard a lot about you, Tracy -" she
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looked at him, shocked - "and it was all from Scully in the last half hour.
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She seems to think the world of you."
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Tracy squirmed in her seat. "I have a lot of respect for her - for the both
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of you, actually. Your reputation does, after all, precede you."
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"What - that I'm dangerously insane and that the Agency plans to have me
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burned at the stake by the end of the year?" Mulder lashed out, tormented by
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the incessant references to his "reputation" that he'd had to endure in
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recent months.
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"That you're one of the best critical thinkers the Agency has ever seen, and
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that to try and get rid of someone with your talent *would* be insane!"
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Suddenly, Tracy was on fire. She leapt across the room, oblivious to the fact
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that yelling at a superior could easily ruin the career she had worked so hard
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to obtain and was not yet firmly within her grasp. "I'm still expendable. I
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could let what happened today totally defeat me - walk out this door, off the
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property, and back home to Mama - and nobody would give a good God damn one
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way or the other. But I'm not going to do that. I refuse to give a handle of
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people who think they're so much better than me the satisfaction of knowing
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that they've won. You have so much more at stake here. Why is it so easy
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for you to just sit there and let yourself implode? You and I may never have
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met before, Agent Mulder, but I know a hell of a lot more about you than you
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might think. I know that you've spent all your life dedicated to the thought
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that you can make a difference in this Godforsaken world. I know that, at
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least until recently, you still believed you could. And then the most
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expedient way to do that is challenged, and you're just going to let them take
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it away from you? I don't think so."
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"And just what makes *you* the expert on what goes on in Fox Mulder's head?"
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They were both on their feet now, inches from each other, yelling as if to be
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heard over a blast furnace.
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"It's going on in *my* head, too!!!" Tracy screamed. "They wanted to
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humiliate me into leaving - into giving up everything in my life I thought
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was worth living for. And...I...was...going...to...let them...." She sank
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down, clutching the edge of the desk for support, tears streaming down her
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face. Every last ounce of bravado had left her. "I *finally* get to a point
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in my lifee where I am in total control of my own destiny, and *one* smart-
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assed comment sends me spiralling back down where I started this crazy game.
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But I deserve better than that, by Jesus - and so do you."
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The two sat there for a long moment, Mulder perched on the end of Scully's
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desk, Tracy on the floor at his feet. Neither one spoke. Suddenly, Tracy
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looked up at Mulder. "Hey, wait a minute - just who was this pep talk
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supposed to be for?" He stared at her blankly for a second, and then they
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both began to laugh.
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They were still laughing when Scully finally returned. "Well, this is
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unexpected," she said, smiling. "I was half expecting to find one of you
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dead when I came back."
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"We were too busy plotting how we were going to kill you for ducking out like
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that," Mulder said, shrugging back into his coat. "Tracy's still counting
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her blessings that she doesn't have her gun yet." He reached a hand down to
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her, helping her up off the floor.
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"That's for sure - d'you know how bad killing your teacher *looks* on a
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resume?" Tracy giggled, still a little overwhelmed by the events of the past
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hour.
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"The way *your* mind works, Ms. Jessup, you would have found a way out of it,"
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Scully remarked, giving Mulder a look that wordlessly asked, _Just what
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happened while I was gone_?
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"Well, I've got to get back to work," Mulder said, avoiding the question.
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"Scully, go buy Tracy a cup of coffee - I think she's going to be okay." The
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three of them left the office. "And Scully?"
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She turned, not knowing what to make of the tone in Mulder's voice. "Yes?"
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"I think I will be, too."
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*****
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Any comments, questions, criticisms, will be readily responded to.
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